The Spain in Iowa Summer Blogger Series. A series to highlight people and their passion for food, culture and life. These are some of the people that continually inspire me in my own blog and life. My hope is that they will inspire you as well.
After two weeks, I’m excited to end the summer blogger series by introducing you to Sofya of the girls’ guide to guns and butter.
The girls’s guide to guns and butter is a blog I am so happy to have run into this year. An impeccable food and homesteading blog that follows the life of Sofya, a young Azerbaijani woman with her husband and two (soon to be three) children.
She lives in the country of Wisconsin and together with her husband they tend to organic gardens, orchards, chickens, ducks and cows and she documents it all with stunning images.
What I absolutely love about Sofya is she is unapologetically who she is. She doesn’t strive to be perfect or meet standards made by men, she lives by tradition as they have for generations in the “old country.”
I love that about her and I know you will to.
You can read more about Sofya, her homestead and mouth-watering recipes at her blog, the girls’ guide to guns and butter or on her facebook fan page.
Eggplants… they make us think of warmer, happier places, singing nightingales, Arabian Nights, and the Pleasuredome of Kubla Khan.
You didn’t really think I meant that, did you? In actuality, they make us think of no such things. In fact, in my experience (and this might or might not apply to the international-minded foodies following this site), eggplants are much maligned in this country, especially as their texture can be somewhat off-putting to Americans whose palate has been conditioned to expect crunch.
But, truth be told, eggplants don’t have a whole lot of flavor of their own, and, in unskilled hands, they can taste as bad as dirty wash water. They are, however, a perfect vehicle for carrying other flavors, and can be great when cooked with the addition of bold-tasting things (such as garlic, for instance), as well lots of some fat to lube everything up. When one or both of those conditions are met, magic is born.
Magic like this.
This here is my favorite way to prepare eggplants – a classic Azerbaijani sauteed eggplant-mayo-garlic combo, re-imagined here as bruschetta topping.
I found these lilac-colored locally-grown beauties at our local food cooperative. I think they made a stunning subject for my photospread.
Sunflower oil… (use any other kind if you don’t have any of this).
Pour it into a cast iron skillet…
…add the slices when the oil is sizzling, and cook them over medium-high heat until they are nicely browned on both sides (a small pair of kitchen tongs works really good for flipping these). They’ll keep sucking up the oil as they cook, so keep adding more. Alternatively, consider roasting them in the oven as shown by Farida of my beloved AZ Cookbook site where she prepares a rather elegant variation on the theme.
Transfer to a bowl…
Press some garlic on top… Press, not mince.
All proportions to taste.
Here I decided to go ahead and add a tad more mayo…
Now stir it all up…
eggplant stuff
This is good either warm, fresh from the pan, or chilled in the fridge for a bit (the latter allows for the further melding of flavors), spread on top of plain, untoasted bread. As such, it works great as appetizer or lunch.
Important Note: Back in the Old Country (and perhaps also in this one), it is customary to soak eggplant slices in salt water for a couple of hours prior to cooking to rid them of their bitterish taste. If you wish to do so, place the slices in a bowl filled with cold, very salty water, and weigh them down with a plate or something like that to prevent them from floating to the top (and float to the top they will). Then drain, dry, and proceed as above.
Sofya Hundt says
Thanks for the opportunity, Diana!
Sofya Hundt says
Great collage, too.
A Little Bit of Spain in Iowa says
No, thank you!!
Sofya Hundt says
You make me blush, too!
amelia from z tasty life says
love the collage: great photos
Mely@Mexicoinmykitchen says
I found hes blog thanks to you and I am enjoying reading it.
This recipe is very similar to one we make at home with the addition of roasted red peppers in a crusty bread. And as Sofya mentions, it is good hot or cold. And the flavor is better after a day in the fridge.
Have a great weekend Everyone!
Anna says
I finally made this! And yes, I can attest to it tasting great the next day, cold. Even for breakfast. LOL.